Sankalpa is a conscious intention or resolve; setting it at the beginning of practice creates a seed that gradually transforms beliefs from within.
Sankalpa is a conscious intention or vow made with the whole being—not a casual wish but a deep resolve aligned with your authentic values. In the context of belief transformation, sankalpa is the practice of consciously planting a seed of new intention into the subconscious mind. You identify a belief you want to cultivate ("I am capable," "I am worthy," "I can learn") and affirm it as sankalpa at the beginning of meditation or practice, when the mind is most receptive. Over time, repeated sankalpa reshapes the subconscious layer where beliefs live. This is more powerful than intellectual affirmation alone because sankalpa is made in a state of reduced mental resistance and is reinforced through consistent practice. Patanjali teaches that sankalpa works with the psyche's actual architecture: it gradually weakens old belief-samskaras while establishing new ones. Importantly, sankalpa must be positive, present-tense, and aligned with your deepest truth—it cannot be imposed artificially. When your sankalpa reflects what you actually wish to become, the mind gradually reorganizes around it. This is why sankalpa is sometimes called the "yoga of intention": it's the practice of consciously directing the formative power of your mind toward beliefs that serve your growth.
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